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A Doctor Writes: Predictions of Doom Have Not Been Borne Out

by Michael Curzon
11 September 2021 8:00 AM

We’re publishing an update this morning from the Daily Sceptic’s in-house doctor in which he analyses the latest NHS hospital data. Conclusion: no need to panic.

I have been a bit quiet lately, partly due to being on holiday and partly due to waiting a while to examine what trends are emerging from the hospital admissions data over the later summer.

On looking at the latest figures and associated media commentary I have been reminded of an old Russian aphorism from the Soviet era: “The future is certain, but the past keeps changing.”

For example, on February 3rd, 2020, Boris Johnson, warned of the danger that “new diseases such as coronavirus will trigger a panic”, leading to measures that “go beyond what is medically rational, to the point of doing real and unnecessary economic damage”.

I didn’t catch any reference to that (very reasonable) remark this week when the Prime Minister imposed further taxation on the working-age population and the companies that employ them. Before returning to the airbrushing of recent history, I will consider the hospital level data over the last month to discern trends and discuss what reasonable inferences we can draw from the numbers. I confess that some of the information doesn’t quite make sense to me – I will elaborate on this point later.

The first and most glaringly obvious fact is that the catastrophic tsunami of hospitalisations confidently predicted by all the experts who have assumed the governance of the U.K. has failed to arrive. How annoying that must be for Richard Horton, Editor in Chief of the Lancet, who described the relaxing of restrictions in July as “driven by libertarian ideology” rather than the data. Or Trish Greenhalgh, Professor of Primary Care Health Sciences at Oxford University, who said that “the Government policy seems designed to increase cases” and predicted there will be hundreds of ‘superspreader’ events in the coming weeks. The Lancet published a letter signed by 122 self-identifying experts which suggested that the Government was conducting a “dangerous and unethical experiment” in removing societal restrictions on July 19th.

Just to push the point home, readers may wish to consider Graph One. This shows the seven-day average of positive Covid tests on largely asymptomatic people against total patients testing positive for Covid in hospital. It can clearly be seen that the community tests peaked on July 23rd, rapidly falling off thereafter. Hospital numbers barely changed in response to changes in community test rates – so where is the epidemiological stupidity?

The latest updates on community testing from Public Health England (PHE) suggests that the current incidence of positive tests has been stable or decreased from week 28 (w/e July 22nd) to week 35 (w/e September 9th). I may have missed it, but I have not so far noticed a retraction letter in the Lancet from the expert commentariat.

Graph Two shows the number of patients testing positive for Covid admitted daily to English NHS Hospitals on the blue bars, with the seven-day rolling average on the brown line. It seems clear that there has been virtually no change in this graph since July 19th – the upslope trend levelled off and has remained flat ever since. Perhaps one of our epidemiological intellectuals could explain to me, a humble clinician, why it was ‘stupid’ to at least attempt to get our economy back to some sort of normality?

I noticed something else slightly odd about this graph. I have highlighted the Mondays (or Tuesday August 31st in the case of the bank holiday) in red. It seems to me that there is a ‘weekend trend’ emerging in relation to Covid admissions from the community. How can that be? Acutely ill admissions with respiratory infections do not usually predominate during the working week and fall off at the weekend. One possible explanation is that on Mondays the numbers could be boosted by patients being admitted for routine matters who just happen to test positive for Covid, rather than being acutely ill. There may be other explanations for the weekly pattern of variance which are not immediately obvious to me. Graphs Three and Four might shed light on this point.

Graph Three shows the number of patients in hospital testing positive for Covid over the last few months. There has been a small increase in numbers over the last six weeks, but not by any means a massive rise. Given that there are approximately 120,000 beds in the English NHS, this represents a Covid positive bed occupancy of around 5%.

And yet, Graph Three is not all that it seems. Readers may recall the Department of Health was forced in July to release the ‘Primary Diagnosis Supplement’ – an extra spreadsheet detailing patients in hospital testing positive for Covid but not suffering from acute Covid – in other words where a positive Covid test may be an incidental finding. Graph Four shows that the NHS is still overstating the numbers in hospital with acute Covid by about 25%.

I naively expected when the authorities were forced by political pressure to finally release this information that NHS spokespeople would then revert to expressing the daily numbers differently and report only the numbers of patients in hospital with acute Covid. But clearly not. So, when the NHS say there are about 6,000 patients in hospital who have tested positive for Covid, by their own published numbers one can see that just over 4,000 of these are actually suffering from Covid symptoms – a bed occupancy of 3.3%.

To explore this point further, Public Health England have just released an influenza and COVID surveillance update. To summarise the information in this very detailed document, the rates of both hospitalisation and death from COVID per 100,000 population are much higher in unvaccinated people compared to fully vaccinated. Transmission of the virus seems similar in both groups for ages over 40, but transmission that does not lead to hospitalisation is of dubious clinical relevance. Unfortunately, the report provides figures as ratios, rather than providing raw numbers, which makes detailed analysis difficult. Further there is no breakdown in the document in relation to severity of hospitalised cases. My anecdotal information (which I can’t reliably corroborate) is that the majority of severe cases in ICU are unvaccinated or markedly obese and that severely ill vaccinated patients almost always have very significant co-morbidities.

This data really matters because it is now clear that there is a defined ‘at risk’ segment of the population susceptible to severe infection, and that for the vast majority of British citizens the virus really does pose minimal threat. That being the case, there can be no justification for any further restrictions on civil liberties with the attendant economic damage so clearly articulated by the Prime Minister in February 2020.

Graph Five shows daily Covid discharges on the blue bars displayed against Covid admissions and positive tests in hospital on the orange bars. Again, these numbers don’t really make sense to me – if there was this degree of disparity between admissions and discharges, one would expect the numbers of inpatients to accelerate at a much faster pace. There may be some double counting going on, or the definition of an ‘admission’ may also encompass patients seen in A and E and sent home without spending any time in hospital. Release of length of stay data could help resolve these discrepancies – such data does exist, but we are not permitted to see it. Readers may draw their own conclusions.

Once again, the ‘weekend effect’ can be clearly seen in the blue bar discharge data. Despite all the hype around seven-day working, the NHS doesn’t really function at the weekend. Maybe the extra £20 billion of taxpayers money might change that. Or maybe not.

Finally in this update, readers may wish to assess Graph Six – the number of daily Covid staff absences in the NHS – still running at about 15,000 per day. The total number of staff off work every day for reasons of ill health is about 73,000.

So, what can we make of all this information? Well to be frank, it’s really quite boring. I could have written many more pages with charts of ICU patients and deaths and comparisons of real-world data vs. various confidently stated predictions from experts. They all show the same thing – no significant change in hospitalisations or deaths, or severity of disease for at least the last six weeks, despite the predictions of doom.

Does this mean the ‘pandemic’ is over? Again, to be candid, I simply don’t know. Further, I don’t think anyone knows. I have seen some well-argued pieces lately, particularly by Andrew Lillico in the Telegraph, analysing the herd immunity threshold in relation to the RO of the virus – his conclusion is that it is highly unlikely we will see a resurgent wave this autumn and winter. I sincerely hope he is right – time will tell.

In autumn 2020 we also had a gradual rise in cases which flattened out in late autumn before the Alpha variant took everyone by surprise in mid-December and kicked off the winter surge. Could this happen again in 2021? The difference this year is that we know vaccines have a significant effect on preventing hospitalisations. According to the Office for National Statistics, approximately 93% of adults in England have Covid antibodies either by natural infection or induced by vaccines.

There are two plausible ways in which Covid could make a resurgence in the same way as April 2020 or January 2021. The first is a novel variant which escapes vaccine induced immunity. The second is early waning of immunity induced by vaccination or natural infection. In the latter case, this should be detectable early and remediable by booster vaccines if needed. I note that Dame Sarah Gilbert recently commented that vaccine induced immunity seems to be holding up well and that, in her opinion, booster vaccinations should not be necessary for the majority of people.

It seems to me that we are now in the consolidation phase of the Covid episode, characterised by various professional groups striving to consolidate their gains over the last 18 months. Lest readers think I have adopted pretensions as a preternaturally gifted savant, I conclude this based on the behaviour of homosapiens over centuries. Humans have tended to pursue power, money and influence throughout the course of documented history and to exploit moments of crisis to accrue more of these things – I can’t see why this would change now. In detail I note that:

  • The Government are demanding extension of emergency Covid powers to the middle of 2022 ‘just in case’. In other words, we continue to be governed by ministerial fiat, without parliamentary scrutiny on the pretext that we are in an emergency – the data does not support that argument.
  • The NHS high command seems to have achieved almost complete ‘state capture’ and judging by this week’s announcement on raising NI contributions they now appear to be running the Treasury as well as virtually every other Government department. Spending on health and social care is expected to account for 40% of Government expenditure by 2025 and seems set to rise further – as the MP Marcus Fysh observed, the U.K. now appears to be a Health Service with a country attached to it.
  • The various testing companies and associated paid advisors (some within parliament such as the former minister Owen Patterson who is paid £8,333 per month by Randox) will attempt to extend their activities into other infectious pathogens such as influenza, particularly if we have a significant flu outbreak this winter. The genetic sequencing firm Oxford Nanopore, a conspicuous beneficiary from the pandemic, has announced its intention to float on the London Stock Exchange, prominently advertising the potential profits still to be made from testing services in this and possible future pandemic threats.
  • The unions, especially the teaching unions, are doing their best to prevent their members from actually doing any teaching on the grounds that interfacing with children is too dangerous for their members.

Most importantly from the consolidation perspective, the fear among the public must be maintained. Fearful people are more compliant and less likely to push back against arbitrary rule. The prospect of an imminent catastrophe must constantly be front and centre to ensure maximum benefit for the full spectrum of vested interests. Models will continually be adjusted to reflect the possibility of danger ahead – the woeful track record of predictions to date will be tactfully ignored by the mainstream press, to keep the confected risks in the public mind – danger and worry sells more papers than calm reassurance and sober assessment of the numbers.

The 19th century German philosopher Frederick Nietzsche commented in one of his essays that circumstances can arise where “the dead bury the living”. He meant that a false interpretation of history creates a situation where the living are too fearful to live fully, preferring instead to cower away, just in case calamity strikes. In this case, people are willing and indeed grateful to cede liberty and authority to centralised government in return for the illusion of safety.

The future is certain.

Tags: CasesDeathsHospitalityThe Lancet

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92 Comments
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loopDloop
loopDloop
3 years ago

Have you paid James the 50 quid?

91
-1
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  loopDloop

Not sure he’s lost the bet yet, has he? I don’t remember the exact words, wasn’t it something like “back in lockdown before Christmas”?

I remember thinking at the time that the bet, albeit admittedly somewhat lighthearted, was seriously problematic, because they didn’t even try to define “lockdown”.

You can argue, as Julian does here for instance, that we are still in lockdown as long as covid panic measures remain in force, and hence haven’t been out of it since March 2020 (I’m sure Julian will correct me if I’m mis-remembering his words there).

You can argue that the partial measures currently in force count as lockdown.

But equally you could take the position that lockdown means general restrictions on movement impacting ordinary people in their day to day lives (not just at special occasions like football matches or nightclubs).I’m inclined to that definition, and hence that we aren’t currently in lockdown. Though that in no way implies any acceptance of the stupid and/or evil current panic measures.

14
-3
loopDloop
loopDloop
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Nice try Tobey. The spirit of the bet was that things weren’t going backwards. But ok, wait another two weeks until we are in proper lockdown, then fork over.

10
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  loopDloop

Haven’t heard him come out with that argument yet, myself. But it’s what I’d probably say if I were in his shoes.

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LMS2
LMS2
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

It’s sufficient that all the restrictions are permanently hanging over us, to be brought in at a whim.
This new variant is an excuse, not a reason. Few of us are surprised that they want more restrictions ahead of Xmas – it’s part of the ongoing war against Christianity and our celebrations. They know how important the Christmas festivities are, even for those who aren’t religious, so that’s why they’re attacking it, yet again.

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Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  LMS2

Again, I’m not supporting the current position, just talking strictly about the bet.

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Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

depends whereabouts in UK you live – even if these measures do get voted down in parliament next week that only applies to England

Scotland, Wales and NI all have some form of vaccine passport in force and will likely continue to do so even after a parliamentary vote down – and the measures are not the same in each of the devolved governments so the severity of their application depends on which of the celtic fringe countries you happen to have the misfortune to live in.

If you are reading GB News please air this as an issue. I shout out on your behalf all the time down here – least you can do is the same in reverse.

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Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Milo

“depends whereabouts in UK you live – even if these measures do get voted down in parliament next week that only applies to England“

Pretty clear the bet related to England, since the Scots and Welsh have their own separate Hells to live in these days. How is that devolved government working out for them, anyway?

“If you are reading GB News please air this as an issue. I shout out on your behalf all the time down here – least you can do is the same in reverse.”

?

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Noumenon
Noumenon
3 years ago

The country is effectively run by a hamstrung Labour Party, not the Tories. This is important to realise in any analysis of the problem.

That isn’t to absolve the Tories of responsibility, they are, but the stronghold of current policy rests in the opposition benches just as it does in devolved parliaments, the EU, the Democrats etc.

Last edited 3 years ago by Noumenon
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Wokey Dokey
Wokey Dokey
3 years ago
Reply to  Noumenon

Is it worth writing to Labour MPs (most of which will follow their corrupt leader and vote with their brethren across the house)?
They have a go at the Tories and vote for their measures. Clowns.

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Moist Von Lipwig
Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago
Reply to  Noumenon

Yes, they only object to Kim Jong Johnson not going far enough, not in principle, they know that Kim Jong Johnson is imposing hard leftism.

19
0
SallyM
SallyM
3 years ago

Defeated in the House of Commons?

What is TY smoking? He is sounding increasingly desperate in attempting to defend his ridiculous thesis about governmental incompetence.

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Nitrambo
Nitrambo
3 years ago
Reply to  SallyM

Agree. They seem a bit too competent about coordinating their so-called incompetence

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0
Noumenon
Noumenon
3 years ago
Reply to  Nitrambo

The problem is that TY’s definition of incompetence is anything he doesn’t agree with. It’s as vacuous as the “conspiracy theory” charge.

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cornubian
cornubian
3 years ago
Reply to  SallyM

This is what we are up against. Its in the eyes. Look at the evil in her eyes as she offers up her child to the god of wokeness….

photo_2021-12-08_07-57-42.jpg
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TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
3 years ago
Reply to  cornubian

Moloch is said to be the favoured god of the Globalists.

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SimCS
SimCS
3 years ago
Reply to  SallyM

It cannot be incompetence when, when they know the vaccines and measures are killing people in extraordinary numbers, that they continue to impose and push them. That’s premeditated, planned, intentional, i.e. criminal.

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ChrisDinBristol
ChrisDinBristol
3 years ago
Reply to  SimCS

Neither was it incompetence to ban HCQ or Ivermectin protocols, or to decry the usefulness of vitamins D, C & Zinc. Denying these treatments has cost thousands (millions?) of lives, and can only be because the vaccine wouldn’t get EUA if treatments exist ( which they do). That is mass murder, plain and simple.

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186NO
186NO
3 years ago
Reply to  ChrisDinBristol

“can only be because the vaccine wouldn’t get EUA if treatments exist ( which they do)”…sadly I think that only applies in the US – I looked, and could not find, any such stipulation for UK MHRA EUA drugs; concede I might be wrong, fervently hope I am.

0
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FrankFisher
FrankFisher
3 years ago

There was never any doubt. All of this has been the plan since march 2020. I’m simply not entertaining excuses and waffle from people who claim otherwise. This is a tick tock tick tock schedule, imposed on HMG by their puppet-masters, which has a global biometric ID system as one objective, to form the foundations of a cashless social credit driven economy. Utopian, within this decade.

Billions will die. Including everyone reading this, and your children. Wake the fuck up.

203
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Trabant
Trabant
3 years ago
Reply to  FrankFisher

Interesting and delightful thesis.
What do you think the nature of the death will be ?
1) Vaxx Injury ( will all us unvaxxed be forcibly vaxxed against our will anyway ? )
2) Unvaxxed being denied food / shelter etc ( by having property rights removed ) and therefore starving to death ?
3) Some other thing such as a much worse REAL pandemic ( think Smallpox or somesuch coming back again ) ?
4) Something else I’ve not mentioned ?
On another note – I’m not really looking forward to mine and my childrens’ death. Quite inconvenient and horrible.

Last edited 3 years ago by Trabant
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Trabant
Trabant
3 years ago
Reply to  Trabant

On another note. Wife is a teacher. Sixty staff in the school. I think most of them are double jabbed / boosted. Out of the sixty, already 2 have had life-changing Vaxx injuries. One has gone completely deaf. One other has developed some constant-pain Auto-Immune disorder.
Son’s teenage friends all jabbed – there’s usually 30% of them absent at any time with some illness or other since jabbing !

94
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Trabant
Trabant
3 years ago
Reply to  Trabant

I’ve just hear from my wife of another friend ( fit healthy not obese etc ) in their early fifties who ended up in hospital after their “booster” !

41
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rtaylor
rtaylor
3 years ago
Reply to  Trabant

Why use an army when you control the media? Once we’re all dead, they’ll come in and take anything left and put it on container ships.

19
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Brian Bond
Brian Bond
3 years ago
Reply to  Trabant

My Dad had his (Moderna) booster on Tuesday at 2pm. At about 10pm he dropped dead!

He was 98 years old, so inevitably all attempts will be made to claim that this was due to ‘old age’, but I’m not convinced. Neither, indeed, are at least 2 of my 4 siblings, who all rushed to have the vaccines last year, and all viewed myself, as the only unvaxxed one of the 5 of us, as ‘insane’!

We have persuaded his GP to refer his death to the Coroner, so at least there is a chance of a post-mortem to determine cause of death. There are other factors in play too, which suggest that he shouldn’t have been jabbed on that day. We wait to hear.

From my personal point of view, I am as certain as it is possible to be that the vaccine killed my Dad.

And I am very angry.

85
0
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
3 years ago
Reply to  Brian Bond

Surely all non predicted deaths outside 48 hours of seeing the GP are coroner/proper autopsy referred?

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Trabant
Trabant
3 years ago
Reply to  Brian Bond

Sorry for your loss Brian.

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Geoff Graham
Geoff Graham
3 years ago
Reply to  Brian Bond

So sorry to hear this. My condolences.

16
0
Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  Brian Bond

I am so sorry for your loss Brian Bond. I hope that you get the answers that you seek and some kind of justice.

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patrickmercer@rocketmail.com
patrickmercer@rocketmail.com
3 years ago
Reply to  Brian Bond

I’m extremely sorry to hear this, Mr Bond: my condolences.

Please keep us posted on developments in this tragedy.

8
0
TheApesOfWrath
TheApesOfWrath
3 years ago
Reply to  Trabant

It’s just a coincidence, I wouldn’t worry about it. Happens all the time.

1
0
Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  Trabant

My partner’s ‘unvaccinated’ (for ‘Covid) son and wife have been denied entry to a swimming pool, and she’s been thrown out of her mother-&-babies club. In Finland.
Those refusing these ‘Covid vaccines’ are already being persecuted. Is this likely to stop or get worse?

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LMS2
LMS2
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

worse.

Am currently watching a programme about Auschwitz.
I’m sure there were people back then who refused to believe such awful things could happen.
I’m also sure, had the phrase been around then, that the rumours of death camps would have been dismissed by many as “conspiracy theory.”

36
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cornubian
cornubian
3 years ago
Reply to  LMS2

I wonder if, in the future, laws will be passed that forbid people denying a pandemic took place?

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patrickmercer@rocketmail.com
patrickmercer@rocketmail.com
3 years ago
Reply to  cornubian

What pandemic?

9
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Paul_Somerset
Paul_Somerset
3 years ago
Reply to  Trabant

It’ll just be a reduction in life expectancy by a year or two. Instead of a cold sending you to hospital to contract pneumonia and die at 85, it’ll happen at 83 or 84. few will notice, and none will care; except for those currently staring at pension deficits and demographic timebombs.

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PhantomOfLiberty
PhantomOfLiberty
3 years ago
Reply to  FrankFisher

The boiling frog

35
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cornubian
cornubian
3 years ago
Reply to  FrankFisher

All I can say is bring it on, the harder and sooner the better. We have to get the psychos to reveal themselves for what they really are and the quicker they do this, the sooner we can expect the sleeping masses to WAKE UP and resist for all they are worth.

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Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  FrankFisher

People don’t want to wake up. They want to go to Mark Zuckerberg’s Metaverse.

PC101434.JPG
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jingleballix
jingleballix
3 years ago

Starmer has said that Johnson is not fit for office………but will vote for the measures that this unfit PM wants to introduce.

Work that one out.

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twinkytwonk
twinkytwonk
3 years ago
Reply to  jingleballix

two cheeks of the same arse.

102
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CynicalRealist
CynicalRealist
3 years ago
Reply to  twinkytwonk

Starmer is worse than Johnson (and I say that as someone who has never voted Tory but has often voted Labour in the past).

64
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Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  jingleballix

What’s stopping Starmer from running over to Boris and dragging him out of the Houses of Parliament and dumping him on the street, if he really thinks Johnson is not fit for office?

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Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

Johnson’s a fat bastard. Starmer’s not dragging him anywhere…

19
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stewart
stewart
3 years ago
Reply to  jingleballix

He’s trying to keep Boris Johnson in office for as long as possible so he does as much damage to the conservatives as possible.

And by saying he’s unfit, it makes it harder for his party’s MPs to kick him out because if they do it will look as if they’re doing it because Starmer said they should.

Just politics.

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186NO
186NO
3 years ago
Reply to  jingleballix

For me you have exposed the real reason we are in a “world of shit” (Thanks to Lee J Ermey, RIP) – HM Official Opposition is chock full of non entity barely human beings who are fully paid up members of the Woke PC Left Revolutionary Army determined to destroy and reconstruct this country in their own malign, useless and deadly image. If Starmer & co – who I would NEVER vote for – cannot score with the goal, very much widened and with no ‘keeper, and the ball on a rail through the middle of the back of the net ( WMT “you cannot miss” to non football types) – what the hell is their purpose in life?

I now see – OK have seen for a while but daren’t properly admit it to myself – “we” are staring down the barrel; Wales and Scotland are currently “lost”, Johnson has fucked NI, Lib Dems are leeches, Greens serve no useful purpose and the multicultural revolution is now recognised – even by it’s proponents like Bliar for whom it was an exercise in mass importation of votes – as a mistake, and that is the proverbial understatement as forensically examined by Robin Aitken..

As an English person born of two English parents, I am effectively culturally “stateless” – in other words I am of “an ethnicity that dare not speak its name”.

Someone stated in the week that “England was defeated in WWII” – my immediate reaction was “fuck off, bollox”; after reflecting on “events”, receiving number 49/100 of a badge commemorating the 100th birthday of Sqdn Ldr Johhnie Johnson, the last surviving Dambuster and emeritus member of 617 Sqdn and thinking about all that means, emailing my MP with the “Together Declaration” letter after a deal of thought , suitably amended and appended, I just might understand that, perhaps, this person was correct.

“Welcome to the Asylum”.

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captainbeefheart
captainbeefheart
3 years ago

Luckily I know of at least one pub in the area that couldn’t give a fuck…

A few other publicans I know of physically can’t afford more restrictions and are at breaking point.

What will happen when the government pushes them over the edge?

Probably nothing. People will comply (“if we all do this, it will all be over after Christmas – if you don’t do what you are told, it is your fault we are still in this mess!”) then the government will come out with the next round of systematic abuse.

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LMS2
LMS2
3 years ago
Reply to  captainbeefheart

They’re never going to let us out.
They told us last year that we’re never going back to normal.
But TY still thinks all the predictions are just a “conspiracy theory,” even as they come true.

21
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PhantomOfLiberty
PhantomOfLiberty
3 years ago

We are engulfed by madness

66
0
Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  PhantomOfLiberty

A nation of people getting their arms tattooed. To show their ‘individuality’.

17
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TheApesOfWrath
TheApesOfWrath
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

I was born in the late 60’s. I’ve got nothing against tattoos, I have a few myself, from many years ago. Nothing visible below short sleeves though. But neck, hand and face tattoos were, not even that long ago, a good indicator that the person had spent time in prison. A woman might have a discreet tattoo on her upper arm or shoulderblade, if you saw a woman with a full sleeve tattoo, or one on the neck or even forearms, you’d put her in the category “Avoid. May stab you over nothing at all””. Or am I just turning into the person my father was at my age?

0
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Beowulf
Beowulf
3 years ago

“…if the Omicron super variant proves to be as dangerous as scientists fear.”

Which scientists and why do they fear the new variant is dangerous? I mean what actual evidence [evidence: a concept ditched by the Government and its so-called experts in favour of computer models) the do they have?

86
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paul smith
paul smith
3 years ago
Reply to  Beowulf

As of this writing, nobody has died of the Omicron Variant, and reported hospitalisations are few and far between.
Reckon our aspiring Masters are going to have to crank up the smallpox.

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LovelyGirl
LovelyGirl
3 years ago
Reply to  paul smith

Which would have the benefit of proving that the one vaccine which is touted to have been an unmitigated success doesn’t actually work…

8
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stewart
stewart
3 years ago
Reply to  Beowulf

“…if the Omicron super variant proves to be as dangerous as scientists WOULD LIKE PEOPLE TO fear.”.

That’s the correct phrase, I think.

I’m sure the scientist know there is little to fear.

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Mr_Human
Mr_Human
3 years ago

Just considering it are they? Right. Expect full totalitarianism by 1st January on par with Germany and the other fallen nation states of Europe. Then perhaps a lockdown for the unvaccinated, before the Govt starts offering money for information on thought criminals & the unjabbed. The unvaccinated then get taken to the super prison concentration camps and are murdered. That gets blamed on a super mutant variant that the unvaccinated were apparently particularly vulnerable to. Mixed responses from the docile subservient quadruple boosted general public. “They should have been vaccinated, it’s tragic but it was their own fault”. Then whistleblowers come out and leaked video footage of the incineration chambers & extermination methods. Govt denies any wrongdoing.

2030 – 2040 revolution.

64
-1
captainbeefheart
captainbeefheart
3 years ago
Reply to  Mr_Human

By that time, people will be so brainwashed that they would probably welcome concentration camps and the murder of the unvaxxed. “They should have done what they were told”

60
-1
Hypatia
Hypatia
3 years ago
Reply to  captainbeefheart

People are already saying that.

“If you are barred from pubs/clubs/restaurants, it’s your own fault, all you have to do is have the jab.”

“If you choose not to have it, fair enough, but don’t complain if there are restrictions on you.”

“If you don’t have it, you’re selfish and putting other people at risk”

Etc etc ad nauseam

Last edited 3 years ago by Hypatia
61
0
HelzBelz
HelzBelz
3 years ago
Reply to  Hypatia

It’s your choice to be discriminated against. I get this all the time from my own husband FFS!!

54
0
LovelyGirl
LovelyGirl
3 years ago
Reply to  HelzBelz

Empathising…

11
0
LMS2
LMS2
3 years ago
Reply to  HelzBelz

I’m not sure I wouldn’t be asking my husband for a divorce, if that’s what he kept saying.
If a man can’t defend his own wife, what good is he?

26
0
LMS2
LMS2
3 years ago
Reply to  captainbeefheart

Have just listened to an account of an Austrian Jewish woman who’d fled early on to England, and worked as a children’s nanny. The family travelled to the Channel Islands in 1939 for a holiday, before the German occupation.
When the family travelled back to England in spring, 1940, the CI authorities followed Home Office guidelines, designated the Austrian woman as an enemy alien, and refused to allow her to go back to England with the rest of the family.

A man told the mother, “If you must trail Jewesses about after you, what do you expect?”

Nothing much has changed, and nothing learned.

15
0
A Y M
A Y M
3 years ago
Reply to  Mr_Human

Dark, but eminently possible.

10
-1
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
3 years ago
Reply to  Mr_Human

They’d have kill camp residents as those inside the camps would be on average healthier than those outside.

Last edited 3 years ago by TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
8
0
Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  TheyLiveAndWeLockdown

And there isn’t already a historical model for that?

5
0
Smelly Melly
Smelly Melly
3 years ago

Just spoke to a friend who’s son owned and managed a care home. He has now shut it down.

40
-1
GlassHalfFull
GlassHalfFull
3 years ago

I have my yellow star badge at the ready.

38
0
rtaylor
rtaylor
3 years ago
Reply to  GlassHalfFull

I am also a non Graphene Oxide electronic transmitter with no scarring of the heart. How do you do.

27
0
Garfy1967
Garfy1967
3 years ago

I don’t see how it is possible for pubs to introduce a system whereby they have to check every single person’s vaccine status. They could scarcely be bothered with track and trace when they were supposed to check that and just paid lip service to it. Once again, these “rules” are designed by people that have never set foot in a pub in their lives and have no idea how they work.

53
-1
captainbeefheart
captainbeefheart
3 years ago
Reply to  Garfy1967

Why would they want to go to a pub full of the great unwashed when they have their heavily subsidised MPs member bar? They can sit in there, smoking their fine cigars laughing at how stupid we all are without fear of getting glassed in the throat.

35
0
A Y M
A Y M
3 years ago
Reply to  Garfy1967

Not sure any pub that enforced this I would want anything to do with. All these shedders in an enclosed space, I’d barely make it out alive.

23
0
LovelyGirl
LovelyGirl
3 years ago
Reply to  Garfy1967

Yes. At a recent cinema visit there was no one there to check our tickets. Just to sell popcorn and ice-cream. They’ll have to build turnstiles of employ way more staff to implement passes.

8
0
Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  LovelyGirl

job creation scheme

3
0
rayc
rayc
3 years ago
Reply to  LovelyGirl

Turnstiles (that check your QR code) it will be. One year from now the world will be full of such turnstiles.

2
0
Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  Garfy1967

Barrier at the door opens when you scan your phone. Test & Test was a success – it’s aim was divert public money into Serco who then gave ministers backhanders.
Barriers don’t really fit the scene of traditional British pubs, but then neither does staff fitted in face masks and plastic visors, and ‘unvaxxed’ customers sitting outside in the rain looking miserable.
This Government is stamping out British culture.

25
0
stewart
stewart
3 years ago
Reply to  Garfy1967

Anyone relying on all this not working for it to fall apart is going to be bitterly disappointed.

Of course it’s possible for pubs to check vax status. Have you ever been to a bar in the US? The card everyone, even those who looked like they’ve been past 21 for a decade or two.

Vax passports in bars and restaurants are perfectly doable, I’m very sad to say.

5
0
Julian
Julian
3 years ago

Just a cock-up

24
-1
LMS2
LMS2
3 years ago
Reply to  Julian

Yeah.
Sure.
Right.

Next joke….

2
0
Jonny S.
Jonny S.
3 years ago

Nothing to see here.

https://twitter.com/Kukicat7/status/1469052560405405696

7
0
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
3 years ago
Reply to  Jonny S.

I’m from the government and I’m here to help.

5
0
HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
3 years ago

So…after two weeks or so of this variant scientists STILL don’t know if it’s dangerous or not, despite no deaths and no hospitalisations from it. 🤔 So let’s give to them harder, based on bugger all science but full on lobbying, and control from the puppet masters the keep pushing the agenda forward. Always has been the plan. Yesterday it was reported that a cruise ship with it’s 100% fully vaxxed and tested inmates, had an outbreak of covid (or an outbreak of a positive test) as did Gibralter, with 100% fully vaxxed population, that had to go back into lockdown! 😵 🤦

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0
HelzBelz
HelzBelz
3 years ago
Reply to  HelenaHancart

They know it’s not dangerous but that’s not the point. All they have to do is scare the masses into complying with more restrictions.

The number of people I see on social media begging everyone to wear the mask and take the needle shows that it’s working well.

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0
Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
3 years ago
Reply to  HelzBelz

some of them bots

5
0
TheApesOfWrath
TheApesOfWrath
3 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

Most of them, I’d wager.

0
0
Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  HelenaHancart

Air is dangerous. Everyone should stop breathing. Everyone who has died has breathed air. What more proof do you need???

15
0
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

Breathed out air is poisoning our plants!

5
0
BJs Brain is Missing
BJs Brain is Missing
3 years ago

My suggestion, for what it is worth, is to get 3-6 months of food stored and put away. I think things are going to get a bit ‘tasty’ in the coming months. Now is the time, if you have not already decided, to choose your side. Basically you are either on the side of freedom loving natural humanity, or oppressive digital serfdom.

Buckle up, it’s going to get a bit bumpy. But it must be seen through, for our children’s and families sake. Do not dishonour our heritage and forefathers sacrifices.

Last edited 3 years ago by BJs Brain is Missing
88
0
A Sceptic
A Sceptic
3 years ago
Reply to  BJs Brain is Missing

Already done that, a bursting freezer, and lots of dry/packaged food. Did this as soon as the various regulations were extended to April. Also got candles as soon as Boris said there would be no power cuts.

37
0
WorriedCitizen
WorriedCitizen
3 years ago
Reply to  BJs Brain is Missing

Way ahead of you. Months ago I saw all this shit coming as I’m sure many here did. Bought a massive outdoor compatible (garage) freezer and stuffed it full plus filled a spare bedroom cupboard full of non perishables, you know, just in case.

Last edited 3 years ago by WorriedCitizen
19
0
Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  WorriedCitizen

can you tell me what brand of freezer you bought – I am looking for same – would save me a LOT of time. Thanks

6
0
HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
3 years ago
Reply to  BJs Brain is Missing

Been doing that for that for the last year. Got to know other like minded people, looking after my family, bought emergency supplies, got to know local independent shops. Prepared to hunker down if necessary.

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Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  BJs Brain is Missing

SAGE said they wanted this to carry on for another 5 years. After that it’ll be another 5 years to make sure.

Now SAGE expert calls for children as young as five to be jabbed to fight off the impending Omicron wave

  • Professor John Edmunds says jabs should be brought in ‘as soon as possible’
  • Britain’s recent surge in cases is now being driven mostly by children, he says 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10293109/SAGE-expert-calls-five-year-olds-jabbed-fight-impending-Omicron-wave.html

Room G09LSHTM
Keppel Street
London
WC1E 7HT

John.Edmunds@LSHTM.ac.uk

London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

Last edited 3 years ago by Emerald Fox
6
0
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

“symptomless cases” are the core of this manufactured panicdemic

9
0
TheTartanEagle
TheTartanEagle
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

I just went through the last update of Scottish death data.

In 2020, a 53 week year, a total of 148 infants under 1 year died. Mean of 3 per week.

In 2021, by week 48, a total of 174 infants have died.

In the first 13 weeks of 2021, a mean of 3 infants died per week, with a total of 38.

From week 14 – 26, mean of 4 infants died per week, total 48.

From week 27 – 39, mean of 4 infants died per week, total of 49.

From week 40 – 48, mean of 4 infants died per week, 39 so far and with projection for the last 4 weeks of the year that will be 16 more so potentially 55 for the last quarter.

So we are looking at a 28% increase in infant deaths in 2021 compared with 2020. That is massive. This is unforgivable.

All figures from the national registers of Scotland.

21
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RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

Britain’s recent surge in cases is now being driven mostly by children, he says

We already know that Britain’s surge in positive test results is driven by forced mass testing of pupils. It has been in this way since before the summer holidays.

13
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Noumenon
Noumenon
3 years ago
Reply to  BJs Brain is Missing

Don’t buy frozen food it’s a waste of money and space. One extended power cut and it’s all useless. Dried and canned is the solution.

19
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Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  Noumenon

good point.

8
0
Bobby Lobster
Bobby Lobster
3 years ago

I have noticed testing has gone up steadily since late October, to regularly, more than 1,000,000. So-called “cases” seem to be more-or-less 5% of tests. I wonder why we are usually getting 50,000 “cases” a day? I think this has been the case for positivity rate for 20 months now.

30
0
Amtrup
Amtrup
3 years ago
Reply to  Bobby Lobster

This ^^^^

1
0
HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
3 years ago
Reply to  Bobby Lobster

We didn’t go to a funeral recently because they wanted everyone to take a test beforehand and wear masks. Now it turns out that someone has since tested positive and everyone there had to be informed, to get tested again! The person that related this, was in awe of it all. Of course the person who tested positive actually has full blown covid in her eyes!

20
0
Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  HelenaHancart

kerching for testing industry

9
0
Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  Bobby Lobster

Who is doing all this testing? Shouldn’t these people be stopped from doing just that? Do testers live on your street?
There must be a lot of petrol available for people to keep driving to the test centres. So, no shortage of petrol?

12
-2
caipirinha17
caipirinha17
3 years ago
Reply to  Emerald Fox

The testing that people are submitting to has nothing to do with the numbers being reported by govt. There’s no way for average Joe to verify the numbers so they can spout anything they like.

9
0
Jo Starlin
Jo Starlin
3 years ago

There is ZERO hope of this being defeated in the Commons. Labour are itching to vote it through.

43
0
James Kreis
James Kreis
3 years ago

“WE SAY NO” – an anthem for our times

NATE – WE SAY NO – YouTube

13
0
Free Lemming
Free Lemming
3 years ago

There is no Plan A, B, C etc. Just Plan endgame. If you can’t see that by now, you won’t until it’s too late. Time to forcibly resist.

53
0
Hypatia
Hypatia
3 years ago

Safe and effective.

 

 
Here is a safe and effective vaccine. We’d like you to have it, please.
Here is a vaccine that isn’t particularly safe, but we’d still like you to have it.
Here is a vaccine that doesn’t work terribly well, but we want you to have it.
Here is a vaccine that’s not safe or effective, but you must have it.
Don’t argue.
 
If you don’t have it, you are selfish
If you don’t have it, you are not thinking of others.
If you don’t have it, you are a danger to those who have had it.
If you don’t have it, you risk overwhelming the NHS.
If you don’t have it because you are selfish and the NHS is overwhelmed, people will die.
If people die it will be your fault.
You don’t want people to die, do you? So have it.
 
If you don’t have it, we’ll have to punish you.
If you don’t have it, we’ll bar you from nightclubs.
From pubs. From restaurants. From cinemas. From theatres. From shops.
If you don’t have it, we’ll take away your job.
If you don’t have it, we’ll fine you.
If you don’t have it, then maybe you shouldn’t be allowed any other health care.
If you don’t have it, you are not fit to mix with people who have had it.
 
If you don’t have it willingly, then we’ll make you have it.
We’ll catch you and force it on you.
We’ll lock you up, so the rest of us can be safe, away from the selfish people.
And if there are too many selfish people, then we’ll have to do something more permanent, to keep the rest of us safe.
 
Oh, we fully appreciate that you have a free choice!
But for everyone’s safety, you must make the right choice.
 
Think carefully.
 
Here is a safe and effective vaccine. We’d like you to have it.
 
 

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brachiopod
brachiopod
3 years ago
Reply to  Hypatia

Before you do anything, read Robert Kennedy Jr’s book about the criminal enterprises that are behind the jabs – they are the same criminal enterprises who have been found guilty and fined billions of dollars by the US Legal System. But for some unfathomable reason the men and women who ran these criminal enterprises have never done a single day in jail, despite sending hundreds of thousand of men women and children they experimented on to early painful deaths.

39
0
JeremyP99
JeremyP99
3 years ago
Reply to  Hypatia

Like this, it works…

VaccineMeme.jpg
9
0
TreeHugger
TreeHugger
3 years ago

I can’t do this anymore. I just had the start of an autistic meltdown in the supermarket. People all masked walking around not engaging at all like miserable robots. I almost shouted at them all. I’ve not had a meltdown in public for years. I won’t go into shops anymore. I can’t take it. These moronic zombies are threatening mine and my kids futures with their drone mentality.
It’s a bloody cold ffs!!

120
0
Hypatia
Hypatia
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

I know. I feel the same. Worst of all is knowing that people are walking into this, and even worse, some will think it’s for the best!

50
0
Nymeria
Nymeria
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

I know how you feel, but please try to not let them defeat you. That’s what the bastards want. It is a depressing experience being surrounded by all those morons but it is so important to walk among them, free faced, and with your head held high.

63
0
rtaylor
rtaylor
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

Yes I agree, its astonishing to see. So many have outsourced their critical thinking on nearly every decision they would normally need to make. I noticed this started when FB went onto mobile to make money, around 2012.

Fast food, fast photos, fast thinking…

One thing you may want to consider is turning off the router/wifi and electronics at night. This really helps the kids sleep. A few crystals to stop these waves near the router/desktop (easily searchable on Youtube) may also be something to investigate.

You are not alone 🙂

29
0
Trabant
Trabant
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

My wife came back from Tesco earlier saying the same thing. She was the only unmasked one and all the muzzeloid cretinous zombies were “Giving her evils”

33
0
A Y M
A Y M
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

Completely understand. I hope you have found some fellow awakened to feel some semblance of normal human interaction.

if you get your strength back do go back into battle amongst them (ideally with a fellow traveler). I confront the zealots and shame them for telling me to put on a mask. I find these peoples aggression collapses very quickly when you turn the tables vocally and shame them for their pathetic fears their policing others who they don’t know. I’m fairly sure these shamed covidians will think twice about going after us again.
one by one these Stasi monsters need dressing down back into their fear driven holes.

just my opinion of course.

27
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A Sceptic
A Sceptic
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

Completely understand, I suffer extreme anxiety when I can’t see people’s faces as I rely on visual clues to judge what they’re thinking ( and hence whether they are a danger to me, this is hard-wired into me from childhood trauma). I had a meltdown too this week, in the GP surgery.

I stopped going into shops in April 2020, resumed in July this year and am now back to online shopping only. It’s a shame as I am now unable to support small businesses in the local indoor market.

Fortunately the local post office is ignoring the rules, as are a few others. But I just can’t face the bigger shops.

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Jo
Jo
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

I’m not autistic but I had a similar experience when I went to the pet shop in the local garden centre. Everyone bar one masked. Previously the masked were in the minority, and no staff wearing them. I had such an urge to start screaming at them all, for a moment I thought it was going to happen. I’ve been avoiding the shops, I must admit.

26
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Davke
Davke
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

I like to whistle a little as I wonder around. Winds them right up.
When you step back and look at them all, it really is the most bizarre spectacle ever. Makes me laugh every time.

Last edited 3 years ago by Davke
31
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

I’m not in the slightest autistic, as far as I know, and reasonably confident out and about. But I too find it disturbing in places where I am the only unmasked human, and there has clearly been a significant upturn in fearful compliance as a result of the latest scaremongering.

My trip to the local Co-op on Sunday where compliance has always been quite high but had dropped to a third or so recently, was pretty shocking, with basically 100% masking from customers and staff – something completely new there. It definitely felt like a scene from Invasion of the Bodysnatchers.

Stay strong, stay calm, and don’t blame or doubt yourself. Stay in control, and support any others you can make contact with locally. It’s about building local contacts and support for the long run.

“It’s a bloody cold ffs!!”

The hard truth, that the panickers refuse to face.

41
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HelenaHancart
HelenaHancart
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

This is testing the strongest amongst us. It’s designed to. But don’t be pulled down into the darkness. Don’t attach yourself to it. Breathe deeply and smile. You don’t have to be on the same timeline as everyone else. You can choose to step away from it. Just let everything pass through you and let go of it. Fill your life with all the things you enjoy and that feed your soul. Remember your bravery and strength to stand out from the compliant masses, shines a light on their weakness.

39
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captainbeefheart
captainbeefheart
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

I too have wanted to shout at people “WHAT THE FUCKING HELL ARE YOU DOING YOU BRAINWASHED IDIOTS? CAN YOU NOT SEE YOU’RE BEING PLAYED” several times whilst out shopping over the last year or so.

I was the only maskless person in a Waitrose in February. I could almost feel the hatred from the angry little eyes poking out over the masks. Obviously, being a slightly larger person, no one challenged me (probably because by definition, most of these people are cowards – they’d only pick on someone smaller than themselves to make themselves feel important)

You’ve got to keep going to the shops maskless. You are being an example to those people who are not quite yet brave enough to show their faces.

Saying that, I went in Tesco just now and only 1 checkout staff was maskless. I had to queue longer than normal, but I’d raher that then be served by a zombie.

You are doing the world a service! Keep it up!

46
0
wendy
wendy
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

Keep going TreeHugger. Please don’t give up, we’ve got to support each other. It’s horrible and I know exactly how you feel. I avoid places as much as possible but for shopping try to go to smaller shops where there aren’t so may maskoids. I don’t want to, but I have started to wear an exemption lanyard just because I feel I won’t get accosted and feel a bit protected with it on.

24
0
RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

While I find the masses of masked non-humans rather depressing, there’s a silver lining to everything: It took me about 45 years to learn how to engage with people in a way which doesn’t immediately make them think that I’m a probably dangerous weirdo and I’m still not terribly good at that. I have absolutely no unconscious facial expressions, just a carefully calibrated set of conscious movements of face muscles in order to look in a way that’s hopefully appropriate in a given situation.

Nobody can expect me to put any effort in this for the muzzleoids. They don’t count and that’s that.

15
0
TreeHugger
TreeHugger
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

Thank you. I have been told that my face says I’m either really sad or angry 90% of the time. Probably explains why I have few friends. It’s funny isn’t it that the woke go on about acceptance on some fronts but are also highly judgemental on others.

For me not seeing faces means I can’t communicate with them at all. I rely heavily on facial cues and tone if voice (hard to hear from under a muzzle). I already refuse to speak to anyone wearing one except shop staff.

It’s soul destroying after years of work to be socially acceptable i again feel that I’m an outcast.

27
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Nymeria
Nymeria
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

Don’t let anyone tell you, or make you feel that you aren’t socially acceptable. You are worth a million of one of those brain dead, brainwashed drones. Likewise, aside from shop staff, I refuse to communicate with the muzzled.

24
0
RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  Nymeria

You don’t realize how easy this is. Recently, I got thrown out of a pub while peacefully drinking a pint and minding my own business (in my opinion, that is) because a female bouncer came to the conclusion that I must be up to something really nefarious as I was walking through the room and looking at people (what she specifically prohibited me to continue). Actually, I did my best to avoid looking at people as I didn’t want to draw any attention to me, just finish my pint. Doesn’t matter. That guy’s weird! We must do something about it before …

To put the blame where it belongs: Monks Retreat, Reading.

Last edited 3 years ago by RW
6
0
TheApesOfWrath
TheApesOfWrath
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

I often get told “You look like you’re about to kick the shit out of someone”. I’m a lover, not a fighter, but this has kept me out of trouble and serious confrontations for many years. Mind you, when I lose it, I go ballistic, and people gasp in shock at how enraged I can get.

0
0
thetruthisoutthere
thetruthisoutthere
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

Having lived as a minority all my life, I am no stranger to this mentality as it always lurks under the surface and does not take much to rear its head no matter how people would like to beleive that things have got better. It just needs a jump start and a catalyst and enough people to condone it or turn a blind eye. Been there seen it, lived it. There is much “ism”, in the world and how quicky people forget the persecution of many in the name of something else. History repeating itself but at the point of a needle.

21
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TreeHugger
TreeHugger
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

Thank you for all the nice comments.
I will get past this and carry on, I have to for my sons.

I have been meaning to go to the local stand in the park, but with husband not on board, it’s tough. I’ll try and go this weekend, I need some local support.

28
0
Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

know the feeling – wish it was warmer times to STIP!!!!

5
0
Milo
Milo
3 years ago
Reply to  TreeHugger

I feel like that too. I am so depressed – which is precisely what they want.

12
0
pamholmes@reagan.com
pamholmes@reagan.com
3 years ago

Very thankful to live in the southern United States right now. Cases are low and virtually nothing left of masks or mandates. I really thought England would be the shining light across the pond while EU goes full authoritarian. We over here stand in solidarity with you freedom lovers, stand firm, hold the line.

57
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  pamholmes@reagan.com

“I really thought England would be the shining light across the pond“

You have the advantage of the Republican Party, much of which has openly resisted mandates, both mask and vaccine, and many of whom recovered from the worst panic some time back.

Politically, you should think of the UK as akin to a NE US Democrat fiefdom, with basically no genuinely conservative politicians and office contested between various sects of leftist collectivists, who have naturally been full on panickers because they can see how great it is for the collectivist nanny state, and for their corporate backers.

As for Europe, they’ve pretty much just reverted to type.

34
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RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

As for Europe, they’ve pretty much just reverted to type.

I assure you that your analysisis spot-on for Germany, just a little bit worse because the currently influential crop of German politicians all more-or-less believe that their duty is to keep a thumb on the Nazi population of the American satellite state they’re administrating. The situation in Austria is very likely the same again, except still worse as Austria, being an entirely artifical construct similar to all these middle eastern states the Entente powers carved out of the former ottoman empire, isn’t even notionally sovereign. One could even venture a guess that this also applies to Italy to a degree, considering that it also fought on the wrong side of the second world war.

You (not you personally, but you-the-people of the allied powers) really need to face the responsibility that this all just the outcome of your grand designs for world peace by politically atomizing and ethnically cleansing central Europe. We tried so hard but failed because it’s just the wrong race of people! doesn’t cut it. As one would describe this in software, it’s broken as designed.

Last edited 3 years ago by RW
4
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

“I assure you that your analysis is spot-on for Germany”

You’re not kidding:

“‘The ritual humiliation of children [in Germany] who are asked to go to the front of the class and state their vaccination status daily, those who are vaccinated are applauded.'”

https://twitter.com/GBNEWS/status/1469276958332796935

As for the last part of your post, I probably wouldn’t disagree entirely with you but here is probably not the place for such a discussion.

Last edited 3 years ago by Mark
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stevie
stevie
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

That’s terrible

1
0
Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Our elite is all Californian now.

1
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Sandra Barwick

Probably moving to Texas soon, then.

1
0
peyrole
peyrole
3 years ago
Reply to  pamholmes@reagan.com

Lucky you still being there. We had to return to ‘prison camp’ France from 2 months in Florida. Imagine what that does to your spirits. From hardly any masks or restrictions to full on masks and near 100% compliant population of Macron’s new totalitarian state.
Can’t wait for our next escape to Canaries in January. If we keep moving they might not catch up with us.

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Emerald Fox
Emerald Fox
3 years ago
Reply to  pamholmes@reagan.com

I’ll wheel this one out again, so you can judge for yourself the level of depravity the British have embraced:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSPXzShsFT8

3
0
LMS2
LMS2
3 years ago
Reply to  pamholmes@reagan.com

Unfortunately, our current government in power, despite being the so-called Conservative Party, are more aligned with the current Democrats than Republicans, i.e. RINOs.
They didn’t approve of Trump, and cosied up to Biden early on. They are scum.

6
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A Y M
A Y M
3 years ago

“Our best hope now is that the Government’s ‘Plan B’ proposals are defeated in the House of Commons next week.”

yeah fat chance of that. C’mon!

“But if that is the final straw for Boris and he resigns, the risk is that his temporary successor might be a full-on lockdown zealot.”

Ding ding ding. And wouldn’t that be perfect for the plan to destroy our civil liberties with mandates and digital IDs I mean “vax passes”? Effectively ending our freedoms….

Last edited 3 years ago by A Y M
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Proveritate
Proveritate
3 years ago

if the Omicron super variant proves to be as dangerous as scientists fear.

Those people are not genuine scientists. These are scientists who have prostituted themselves.

They ought to take a look at what is happening in South Africa. Oh, yes, the Omicron variant is spreading, but that’s a good thing since it is less virulent then Delta and will displace it. That’s what happens with viruses: the ones that supplant the others are the more transmissible, less virulent sort.

And here’s what is reported (my bold):

Cases of coronavirus in Africa nearly doubled over a week as the Omicron variant has spread, but hospitalizations in South Africa, where the new variant was discovered, remain low, the UN said Thursday, according to AFP.

In a weekly online press briefing, the World Health Organization’s Africa branch said the continent had recorded 107,000 extra cases in the week to Sunday, compared with 55,000 in the previous week.

Omicron “is reaching more countries in Africa,” it said, adding that research was being stepped up to see whether the new variant was specifically behind the sharp rise. The biggest surge in numbers — 140 percent on average — was in the south of the continent.

However, in South Africa, which discovered the new variant last month, “severe cases remain low,” the WHO said in a statement.”Emerging data from South Africa indicates that Omicron may cause less severe illness,” it said.

“Data which looked at hospitalizations across South Africa between 14 November and 4 December found that ICU (intensive care unit) occupancy was only 6.3 %. (This) is very low compared with the same period when the country was facing the peak linked to the Delta variant in July,” the WHO said.

The agency also reiterated its objections to travel restrictions, which it said had been issued by more than 70 countries and were overwhelmingly aimed at southern Africa, even though countries in the region had been “transparent with their data.”

Michael Ryan, the WHO’s emergencies director, said earlier this week that there is no indication that the Omicron variant causes more severe disease than previous COVID-19 variants, and existing vaccines should protect people who contract it against the worst outcomes of the disease.

ICU occupancy only 6.3%. Practically empty. So, this variant stands little chance of overwhelming the NHS. In fact, we should be encouraging its spread, since it will displace Delta and put an end to this nonsense, since it will become a non-lethal disease.

But, of course, there are many who do not want an end to this. They have an agenda, and they need to keep the population cowering so that they can strip all their liberties. And thus they want to stop and slow down the spread of Omicron because it gives them more time, and more opportunity for their nefarious schemes.

Last edited 3 years ago by Proveritate
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thetruthisoutthere
thetruthisoutthere
3 years ago
Reply to  Proveritate

Our Sage’s tried to down play this citing South Africa’s lower average age range and thereby less people at the older end who would be more susceptible to issues to continue to justifiyng the hide under the bed mentality.

2
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Proveritate
Proveritate
3 years ago
Reply to  thetruthisoutthere

How could that work when this is reported?

(This) is very low compared with the same period when the country was facing the peak linked to the Delta variant in July,” the WHO said.

The demographic has not changed since July. Surely it is irrelevant what the actual population spread is by age, the thing is that ICUs were rammed in July and empty now.

2
0
thetruthisoutthere
thetruthisoutthere
3 years ago
Reply to  Proveritate

Don’t disagree, but the masses will not read beyond a headline even if it does not tell the full story and thereby justify further isolation for those in care homes for their own good.

2
0
Moist Von Lipwig
Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago

Plan C: specifically designed to make Plan B seem necessary, to punish the public for having seen through the fraudulence of Kim Jong Johnson and to over his enormous fat arse.

14
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Moist Von Lipwig
Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago

Message to Toby Young: Kim Jong Johnson is a lockdown zealot.

19
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Mark
Mark
3 years ago
Reply to  Moist Von Lipwig

Johnson has sided with the zealots, and clearly fell for the panic over covid. I’m not sure he counts as a full on zealot when compared to the likes of Gove.

Which is no defence to his personal responsibility for all that has happened on his watch. He needs to go, and his failure and misfeasance in office should be remembered forever and never forgiven. I just think it’s useful to be as precise as possible on these things.

9
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Moist Von Lipwig
Moist Von Lipwig
3 years ago
Reply to  Mark

Good description.

A man with no ideas is at the mercy of a man with ideas, who takes those ideas seriously .

0
0
Major Panic in the jabby jabbys
Major Panic in the jabby jabbys
3 years ago

Plan D – negative tests will no longer be acceptable for your covid social credit pass – stay safe – be a good citizen – we are watching you

10
0
Mark
Mark
3 years ago

“Our best hope now is that the Government’s ‘Plan B’ proposals are defeated in the House of Commons next week. But if that is the final straw for Boris and he resigns, the risk is that his temporary successor might be a full-on lockdown zealot.”

Not much chance of a defeat, with Labour full of zero covid fools. Though, hope springs eternal…

But Johnson going, that certainly looks a possibility in the next few months. He’s made few friends by his weakness and various betrayals.

With that said, I agree with Toby Young that his replacement with a more panicker-friendly PM should be a major concern for us (unless you are of the “worse the better” school on this, and gambling on them pushing even the compliant British public into mass resistance).

I would be interested in Toby’s assessment of the various potential leadership candidates from the perspective of the covid-sane, with a bit of “Kremlinology” analysis of their behaviour and words on the topic over the past two years. That’s something we won’t get honestly done in the mainstream media, and where his personal knowledge and contacts would definitely add value.

8
0
QuickDrawMcGraw
QuickDrawMcGraw
3 years ago

It seems to me that they’re trying to wear us down and break us by using their lackey’s in the mainstream media to publish all these terrible things that will happen to those who don’t comply.

I can only speak from my own experience but I’ve come across loads more people lately who are starting to wake up to what’s happening, even a few former lockdown zealots!

I think they’re issuing all these threats because they’re scared. They know that their narrative is cracking all over the place and they’re running out of time. People are starting to push back all over the world. I think we need to stay strong and positive and beat these f**kers.

61
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artfelix
artfelix
3 years ago
Reply to  QuickDrawMcGraw

Yeah – I feel strangely optimistic. A few months ago I found it very hard to find people who thought the same as me, and would test the waters then avoid conversation about it. Now, most people I meet for the first time at the very least are pissed off about it all and feel conned , and increasingly are starting to accept that some “conspiracy theories” might actually have been right all along. There is a quiet fury simmering, and it won’t take too much more fuel before it burns properly.

41
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Sforzesca
Sforzesca
3 years ago
Reply to  artfelix

Yep. Agree.
Saw several people in Morrisons yesterday (I’m from oop North, we have supermarkets here by the way) not wearing masks.

We smiled at each another. It was so simple yet heart warming.
Helped an elderly lady get three!!! bottles of wine from the top shelf. “You’re one of us aren’t you she said – (I’m a bit of a coward so I wear mine at half mast mainly)
It’s ridiculous isn’t it, she said – and told me to have courage and just take the thing off altogether. Just tell them you’re exempt and no one will bother you.

An example to us all.
Stay strong, hold the Line and we will defeat these utter fucking bastards.

32
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Nymeria
Nymeria
3 years ago
Reply to  Sforzesca

Heed that wise woman’s advice and ditch the mask!

19
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thetruthisoutthere
thetruthisoutthere
3 years ago
Reply to  QuickDrawMcGraw

Always the same narrative. Promise a light at the end of the tunnel and at the very last moment snatch it away. Then put the blame for the issue on a minority. What the masses fail to realise it that the situation will always be structured so that there is always a minority to blame, thus distracting everyone from the main issue and perpetuating the cycle.

16
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RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  thetruthisoutthere

There is always a light at the end of the tunnel. The problem is that our enlightened political leaders keep believing that it’s just another mile before they can finally stop erecting another mile of tunnel and that the people advising them want nothing but build the longest possible tunnel they can get away with.

Instead of staging another useless horse on its hindlegs demonstration in parliament, members from the reportedly governing party should try to get rid of all these experts in getting Labour policies implemented.

Last edited 3 years ago by RW
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Sforzesca
Sforzesca
3 years ago
Reply to  thetruthisoutthere

1920’s Germany Playbook.
And the sheep haven’t a clue they’re being played.
Hilarious – if it were not so tragic.

14
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RW
RW
3 years ago

We’ve all been familiar with this game since the Nobody wants another lockdown! October of last year. The people behind these policies – and that’s not some group of shady oligarchs but some group of experts in applied statistics long past their best-before-end date – will not voluntarily stop at anything short of another lockdown plus showing proof of vaccination everywhere a checkpoint can be installed.

They will keep demanding this in any case, completely regardless of actual or perceived properties of any pathogen. Face mask don’t have to be worn because of Corona, they have to be worn because Susan Michie claims to believe that’s generally sensible and Sars-CoV2 is just the vehicle to get this implemented.

Last edited 3 years ago by RW
11
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RW
RW
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

Just in case someone sees this: The usual experts are pressing for a full lockdown at latest 18th of December to prevent the NHS from being overwhelmed by exponential growth of a mild disease no one has any immunity against.

(source: The Covidian, as the Guardian should really start to call itself)

15
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TheApesOfWrath
TheApesOfWrath
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

The Guardian used to be a decent paper, that did proper journalism, and championed free speech, human rights etc. Now it’s just the Daily Mail for Lefties. Just take a look at this crap. https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2021/nov/30/anti-mask-blitz-war-public-good I’m sure there were gauffaws around the dinner tables in Hampstead when they read this. The truth is, if it was The Blitz, Hyde and her fawning acolytes would have been “working from home” in their country hideaways. If the Germans had invaded, they would have welcomed them with open arms and legs. Hyde and her ilk would have been on their knees, sucking Nazi cock for a loaf of bread or a packet of cigarettes, and gargling the “Horst Wessel” song with pure Aryan semen, for a bar of chocolate and a packet of coffee.

0
0
IanC
IanC
3 years ago
Reply to  RW

Face masks, simply a clear and obvious symbol of subjugation.

Vax free Ian C

4
0
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
TheyLiveAndWeLockdown
3 years ago

Molon Labe

3
0
Sforzesca
Sforzesca
3 years ago

It’s Plan F that worries me.
The second word is Solution.

10
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Hester
Hester
3 years ago

Perhaps Toby might like to investigat this further and raise questions
these 2 sites with backers of the usual Gates and Rockerfella were working on digital id as far back as 2016
Here are the links, which for me prove beyond a doubt this plandemic was a cover all along to get everyone barcoded. 2016. think about it.
https://id2020.org/digital-identity
https://thecommonsproject.org/about
these people need to swing

8
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TheApesOfWrath
TheApesOfWrath
3 years ago
Reply to  Hester

Who will be the first to apologise to David Icke?

0
0
Anti_socialist
Anti_socialist
3 years ago

How come they never cock-up putting the restrictions in place?

11
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J4mes
J4mes
3 years ago

Why are you conflating the communist Social credit System with 1930’s Germany, Toby? I dont need to tell you the two forces were on opposite sides of the war.

2
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siamdave
siamdave
3 years ago

Toby et al – I am getting increasingly frustrated at reading all of your articles complaining about the plan b and plan c and etc and etc – why why WHY does nobody EVER start pushing back with the most obvious thing – all of these proposed restrictions would be completely unnecessary to even talk about if the gov or NHS or whoever was using the available, highly effective treatments for any of the so-called variants – all available here – https://covid19criticalcare.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/FLCCC-Protocols-%E2%80%93-A-Guide-to-the-Management-of-COVID-19.pdf 
– or here https://bird-group.org/protocols/  

You need to just refuse to accept their basic premise, that this is potentially a serious disease for which no useful treatments are available so ‘NPI’s are justifiable – and I’d be screaming this in their f***ing lying faces when they even dare raise the idea of ‘mandatory vaccinations’ –

3
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JeremyP99
JeremyP99
3 years ago

“Controversial vaccine passports could also be extended to more venues under the suite of measures being floated within Downing Street if the Omicron super variant proves to be as dangerous as scientists fear.”

https://order-order.com/2021/12/09/new-eu-and-us-medicine-chiefs-say-omicron-is-mild/

“As the UK government hits the ‘Plan B’ button in a moment of epidemiological stringency, in the past 24 hours both the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the EU Medicine Agency have both said cases remain mild.

15 hours ago the CDC Chief said that of the more-than-40 people in the US have been infected with Omicron, “nearly all of them were only mildly ill” and the “the disease is mild”. Just one person’s been hospitalised.

In the last few minutes the European Medicines Agency matched this, saying cases so far appear to be “mostly mild”:

“Cases appear to be mostly mild, however we need to gather more evidence to determine whether the spectrum of disease severity caused by Omicron is different (to) that of all the variants that have been circulating so far”

Meanwhile the UK government is preparing to hit the UK economy with a stay-at-home order, based on no hospitalisation or death data suggesting it’s necessary. Has the government secretly hired Jacinda as an adviser recently?”

7
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imp66
imp66
3 years ago

It’s very simple: DO NOT COMPLY! If we sceptics organise ourselves, we will amass hundreds of thousands of similar thinkers who probably don’t realise yet just how many of us there are in the ‘Resistance’. Let the authorities and their lackeys cope with a tidal wave of dissenters simultaneously!

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Richard Noakes
Richard Noakes
3 years ago

mRNA vaccinated people worldwide are products, patented goods, according to US law, “no longer human”.
°   Esme Coetzee 10 Dec 2021 at 4:55 PM #63403

GMO HUMANS https://ambassadorlove.wordpress.com/2021/12/08/covid-19-patent-horrors/

All the Covid-19 “vaccine” patents mention gene deletion. All the patents except one, mention “complimentary DNA” (cDNA). cDNA is a chimeric mRNA cocktail that’s being coded into Human cells using artificial genetic sequences in cross-species genomics.

According to the US Supreme Court ruling in 2013, altering Humans with cDNA makes them patent eligible. The court documents show that cDNA is made using modified bacterium and Supreme Court judges ruled it patent eligible. This means that a plant, animal or Human, could be patented and owned if first genetically modified with cDNA.

Mark Steele summarized it perfectly by stating:

In the US, the Supreme Court has ruled that vaccinated people worldwide are products, patented goods, according to US law, no longer human. Through a modified DNA or RNA vaccination, “the mRNA vaccination”, the person ceases to be human and becomes the OWNER of the holder of the modified GEN vaccination patent, because they have their own genome and are no longer “human” (without natural people), but “trans-human”, so a category that does not exist in Human Rights. The quality of a natural person and all related rights are lost. This applies worldwide and patents are subject to US law.

Since 2013, all people vaccinated with GM-modified mRNAs are legally trans-human and legally identified as trans-human and do not enjoy any human or other rights of a state, and this applies worldwide, because GEN-POINT technology patents are under US jurisdiction and law, where they were registered.”

https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/guest-blog/new-supreme-court-decision-rules-that-cdna-is-patentablewhat-it-means-for-research-and-genetic-testing/
2013 USA
In a unanimous decision last month, the Supreme Court ruled that naturally occurring genes are not patentable. But, said the Court, cDNA, a man-made copy of the genetic messenger in cells, is patentable.
On June 13, 2013, the United States Supreme Court brought an end to the long and drawn-out legal battle over the question of whether isolated gene sequences are eligible subject matter for patent protection. In Association for Molecular Pathology v. Myriad Genetics1 the U.S. Supreme Court reached a rare unanimous decision. Breaking with decades of U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) practice, and showing no deference to the USPTO, the Court held that an isolated DNA molecule is not patent-eligible subject matter, if its nucleotide sequence is identical to a naturally occurring gene sequence. In contrast, an isolated DNA molecule with a sequence that is different from any naturally occurring gene sequence, such as a complementary DNA (cDNA), expressly remains patent-eligible.
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/blackstone-private-equity-ancestry-com-dna/
Blackstone announced it was paying $4.7 billion to acquire Ancestry.com, a pioneer in pop genetics that was launched in the 1990s to help people find out more about their family heritage.
Ancestry’s customers get an at-home DNA kit that they send back to the company. Ancestry then adds that DNA information to its database and sends its users a report about their likely family history.
What is cDNA? https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/neuroscience/complementary-dna
cDNA stands for complementary DNA. It is a form of DNA synthesized artificially by messenger RNA (mRNA) that serves as a template in the presence of reverse transcriptase enzyme. In most eukaryotes, genomic DNA contains many genes composed of exons and introns. Exons are the coding sequences while introns make the non-coding part of the genome. Generally, during the gene expression, sense DNA sequence transcribes into an mRNA sequence before producing a protein. When making a mature mRNA, a splicing mechanism removes all the intron sequences. Hence, mature mRNA does not contain introns or the non-coding sequences.
Moreover, mRNA of eukaryotic cells can be extracted and purified in order to make cDNA. The enzyme; reverse transcriptase catalyzes the synthesis of cDNA from these purified eukaryotic mRNA. After constructing cDNA from mRNA, they can then be cloned
DNA is an important polymer that makes our genome. On the other hand, cDNA is another form of DNA that is important to make cDNA libraries and produce proteins that are hardly express. mRNA is used to make cDNA. Most importantly, DNA is double-stranded while cDNA is single-stranded. This summarizes the difference between DNA and cDNA.
LovingLifeTV

3
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Richard Noakes
Richard Noakes
3 years ago

My free salt water cure is not much good for the mRNA vaccinated non humans (see below) because they don’t have any human rights at all, but for those, who like me, are not vaccinated, this will be your get out of vaccination free card:
Covid Crusher: Mix one heaped teaspoon of Iodine table salt in a mug of warm clean water, cup a hand and sniff or snort the entire mugful up your nose, spitting out anything which comes down into your mouth. If sore, then you have a virus, so continue morning noon and night, or more often if you want, until the soreness goes away (2-3 minutes) then blow out your nose and flush away, washing your hands afterwards, until when you do my simple cure, you don’t have any soreness at all, when you flush – job done. Also swallow a couple of mouthfuls of salt water and if you have burning in your lungs, salt killing virus and pneumonia there too.

My simple salt water cure, kills all Coronaviruses and viruses, as soon as you think you have an infection, or while self isolating, before the viruses mutate into the disease in your head and body, for which there is no cure.

I have been doing this simple cure for over 27 years and I am and others never sick from viruses and there is no reason why any of you should be either – when your only alternative are those vaccines!!

Richard

0
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SimCS
SimCS
3 years ago

You have to ask, why masks in churches and not pubs? Why are the churches, including CofE and Justin Welby so silent in all this? Do they not care for people?

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mojo
mojo
3 years ago
Reply to  SimCS

Welby is part of the problem. He dislikes his flock

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mojo
mojo
3 years ago

It seems to me that the public need to stop complying. It only takes 10% of the country to quietly carry on with life and local businesses to collectively ignore these decimating rules. It’s time to get on with life away from The Establishment in London

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IanC
IanC
3 years ago
Reply to  mojo

Abso bloody lutely! But its been that way from the start. Moronic masses still continue to comply. No wonder when the propaganda media continue with their bare faced evil lies.
I am told that this mornings lies included…

“This wouldn’t be the first time a jab has been mandatory, smallpox vaccine was a legal requirement for everyone.”

“Over 90% of hospital beds are occupied by the unjabbed.”

…Along with various other BS commentary.

Vax free Ian C

Bullshit.jpg
Last edited 3 years ago by VAX FREE IanC
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Banjones
Banjones
3 years ago
Reply to  mojo

But wouldn’t local businesses have their licences revoked?

0
0
bowlsman
bowlsman
3 years ago

I’m quiet frankly stunned we are back here again. As far as I’m concerned my country is dead.
The people have all the power but have thrown it away.

10
0
IanC
IanC
3 years ago

These cnuts have discovered they can do whatever they want to their cattle (useless eaters) and far too many of the moronic masses will continue to Roll their sleeves up, drop their trousers, and say YES PLEASE.. I want MORE and I want BIGGER,and I want it NOW!

Last edited 3 years ago by VAX FREE IanC
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Sandra Barwick
Sandra Barwick
3 years ago

We have no hope of defeat in the Commons.
Our only hope – what a hope to have to have – of avoiding full totalitarianism across the world is that the damage caused by these experimental injections becomes so clear that the hypnotic spell on the people through their naivety, their fear of death, their fear of losing their incomes, is broken.
It will have to be very extreme, very clear for that to happen.
It will not be a short process and persecution of people like us would intensify greatly in the mean time.
Otherwise, totalitarianism is inevitable.

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MaL
MaL
3 years ago

“………..if the Omicron super variant proves to be as dangerous as scientists fear.”

Whatever happened to Omicron looking like it was less virulent with no reported deaths attributed to it to date?

When did it become a ‘super’ variant?

Talk about ramping up the fear.

4
0
TheApesOfWrath
TheApesOfWrath
3 years ago
Reply to  MaL

They rely on amnesia.

0
0
JohnK
JohnK
3 years ago

Well, if they try that on, something like this will be issued (see below).

Formal notice extract.jpg
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Banjones
Banjones
3 years ago
Reply to  JohnK

Can you give a link? I can’t read this on my screen. Thanks.

1
0
JohnK
JohnK
3 years ago
Reply to  Banjones

Hi, It’s just a screenshot of the original, compressed down a bit to make it small enough to attach as an image here. Might depend on the screen resolution, but it should be possible to open the ‘link in a new tab’ and then zoom into it to read it; depends on what you are using, though.

However, this is most of the top half of the left hand page:

Exemption Decision
   Having considered the potential risks and benefits to myself and others, I declare that I am exempt from using the “Covid pass” or any related device, or medical product. This is final, and not presented for assessment.
   There is some detail about the reasoning behind this declaration, but note that this is a privilege to you, not a submission for approval.
   You do not have an automatic right to my history, but I might try to explain a little more if you appear competent. There is a little more detail presented below, including the official position published to us all in the ‘Background Information’ section below.
   Be aware that any refusal of service, or any attempt at intrusion into private records, may lead to appropriate legal action. In particular note the final paragraph in “Background Information” below. If any inappropriate attempt occurs, I might require relevant information, so that the relevant people can be be contacted by my solicitor.
   Fundamentally, the Human Rights Act 1998 applies, and in extremis, suitable follow on action may occur.
   Best Regards,

The right hand is a copy of a publication as of 31/07/2021: https://www.nhsx.nhs.uk/covid-19-response/using-the-nhs-covid-pass/#exemptions with minor tweaks – bold text in the main.

0
0
patrickmercer@rocketmail.com
patrickmercer@rocketmail.com
3 years ago

Dangerous times. Johnson won’t lose the vote on Tue, nor will he resign over Partygate etc. He will only be allowed to step down when Carrie realises they’re broke.

However, he’ll now take as much paternity leave as he needs to let the storm/s pass and during that interregnum we’ll get Raab heavily influenced by Lockdown Looney Gove.

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Banjones
Banjones
3 years ago

‘They’ know full well that these ‘passports’ mean nothing whatsoever as anyone can catch it and/or pass it on. They KNOW this. We are being played big time – and the thralls will fall into line. How depressing.

Last edited 3 years ago by Banjones
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0
Banjones
Banjones
3 years ago

The MailOnline. Doing a grand job, as contracted.
http://www.newsmediauk.org/Latest/government-partners-with-newspaper-industry-on-covid-19-ad-campaign

And as they said in UKColumn at the time:  
”So news media have a commercial interest in providing a propaganda service to the UK government. Indeed, it has been noticed that the government is becoming the UK media’s most important client.”

4
0
marebobowl
marebobowl
3 years ago

Not wearing a mask. Why? There isn’t any evidence they work to prevent contracting nor transmitting covid.

The sheeple have been brainwashed as I observed at a concert last night. The hall was full of 70+year old sheeple last night watching and listening to the Blues Band. Sheeple, all masked as told to do. Three of us were not masked. At one point, I realised how easily it is to scare people. All these people have been living with covid for two years, they are alive and well. What exactly do they think is going to happen to them. The stats are in, we know who is at risk for death, we know how to treat covid early to avoid hospitalisation and death, we know what supplements to take, foods to eat, sleep to get, exercise to do. So, why are people afraid?

because the idiots running this shitshow told them to be afraid and never explained all the other data/information/ and behaviours we know will keep you alive. Shame on SAGE, shame on our politicians, shame on every doctor who has participated in this medical negligence. You should be ashamed of yourselves.

4
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